Bullfrogs

American bullfrog, known mononymously in Canada and America as bullfrogs, are a species of aquatic frog, usually found in swamps, lakes, or ponds. They are noted for their yellow, green, and brown coloring, and the males' distinctive grumbling roar. While these frogs are native to the United States and Canada, they now flourish in Central and South America, Western Europe, and parts of Asia.

Wild bull frogs eat everything from grasshoppers, to worms, to flies, to beetles, or even small rodents if they're large enough. If you're keeping one in a tank, you can go to your nearest pet store and buy a bag of crickets - live is best, but you can also get them dried.

The giant African bullfrog or pixie frog will eat mostly insects, stuff like locusts, crickets, worms and grubs. Because of the size of these frogs when adult they will also eat large mice, and large rats, they will pretty much eat anything they can fit in there mouth. Grasshoppers will kill them or...

They eat algae, insect larva's, and tadpole food that you can find at wall-mart in the fish section. They are mostly vegetarian and the live in murky water at creeks and at lakes in the cat tales and where all the other weeds are. They also hang out just a little above the water under the algae.

Predators of young bullfrogs include snakes, turtles, fish and birds. Older bullfrogs can be taken by water birds such as herons, and even raccoons. However, there are far fewer predators of the mature bullfrog, which is why their population is so strong.

they eat insectsBull frogs ( Pyxicephalus adspersus ) eat almost any insect that can fit in their mouths. They do not eat plants, but in captivity eat crickets, pinky mice, roaches and worms. (Earth worms, mealworms ect.) Bull frogs will also eat other small animals like baby mice as mentioned...

I own two bullfrogs, and know this to be true, as they rarely go out of their hiding during daytime, and even if they do, they tend to stay in shaded and vaguely hid spots, such as in the water reeds in my tank. My smaller frog, Bumpy [They're both Juveniles, by the way.] never comes out of hiding...

Well, unless bred in captivity they won't eat anything you catch for them. Anything. If they were from outside that is where they'll want to be and won't feel comfortable in any other environment. So if you're caring for baby bullfrogs from outdoors, don't! They will only die of starvation. But if...

they live in parts of Florida, they live in most parts of north America and Texas, Eastern United States, ranging from as far north as Nova Scotia, all the way down to central Florida. They also live as far west as Wisconsin and the Rockies and were introduced widely throughout Colorado, British...

Most likely the cause of the disappearance is uncontrolled application of herbicides in ditches and runoffs. When the chemicals are washed into the ponds and lakes they sterilize and intoxicate the tadpoles.

It depends on where you are. In the eastern US, it is a native species, but it is considered invasive in the western US and most of the rest of the world, where it grows and reproduces unchecked by natural predators and diseases.